Mr. Platner did something that most progressive outsiders haven’t: He was able to appeal across the ideological spectrum of the Democratic primary electorate, even though he was unmistakably a factional candidate of the activist left.What did Platner do? He defined himself politically before his opponents could do it for him. He was an economic populist who was angry at greedy billionaires and their enablers in government. But he wasn't anti-"woke." On the one issue that right-wing propagandists love to use more than any other to smear Democrats, Platner was maximally "woke," as he made clear in a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" discussion last summer:
Only 13 percent of Maine Democrats said Mr. Platner was “too far to the left” in a New York Times/Portland Press Herald/Siena poll last month. He led his moderate opponent, Gov. Janet Mills, among self-identified moderate voters, 52 percent to 32 percent, in a University of New Hampshire poll taken before she dropped out of the race.
Mr. Platner’s progressive, populist message — anti-corporate, anti-establishment and opposing military aid to Israel, but not “woke” or democratic socialist — was able to occupy a kind of middle ground in the Democratic primary electorate.
On LGBTQIA+ rights, Platner made one of his most pointed responses: “I stand right in the f***ing way of anyone who’s going to try to come after the freedoms of the LGBTQIA+ community.”Here's what I wrote at the time about that answer and other comments Platner made in that Reddit forum:
[Platner] says that “Susan Collins is a tool of the billionaire class,” adding, “We ALL agree we’re all getting f***ed by the system.” When that's your main message, that's what people will remember about you. You define yourself; they can try running an ad against you saying you're "for they/them," rather than "for us," but even some transphobes will ignore it because they see you primarily as a person who wants to fight for "us."Cohn writes:
Our last poll offered striking evidence that Mr. Platner’s views weren’t putting him at a particular disadvantage: Fewer Maine voters thought he was “too far to the left” than said the same of the Democratic Party in general. Let that sink in: A candidate recruited and elevated by the activist left wasn’t necessarily perceived as farther left than the Democratic Party.Yes, because Platner's economic populism and anger at the plutocracy isn't regarded as "too far to the left" anymore, and Platner made sure that that's what you associated him with, at least until the scandals in his personal life caught up with him. As I wrote last year, that's not the approach of the typical Democrat:
Establishment Democrats don't want to take bold stances, which leaves them vulnerable: if they don't say anything memorable about themselves or their positions, opponents will choose a hot-button issue and make that what voters remember about them. To some extent, that's what happened to Kamala Harris, and it's what's happening to the party in general. People think Democrats care only about cultural issues because most Democrats have no memorable positions on other issues. That leaves their enemies free to portray them as caring more about pronouns than grocery bills. But if you take a strong stand on issues that matter to everyone, you can also take strong stands on cultural issues. More Democrats need to recognize this.And I meant "a strong stand," not mealy-mouthed mush like "We're laser-focused on affordability." Cohn notes that one non-progressive seems to be succeeding the way Platner did:
Perhaps the only recent example of a successful, mainstream liberal populist is Senator Jon Ossoff of Georgia, whose re-election campaign has been focused on corruption and money in politics. He’s been one of the few mainstream liberals to earn acclaim from across his party in midterm campaigns this year. If Mr. Platner was an example of a progressive who was reaching toward this emerging Democratic middle ground, Mr. Ossoff is an example of a moderate trying to seize the same basic position.I said that the key was taking strong stands, but what's necessary at a minimum is persuading voters that you're angry about the status quo and will fight. Platner came off as a two-fisted brawler and Ossoff can seem like a thoughtful associate professor, but he's found his anger. Watch the way Ossoff talks about Donald Trump (and Ossoff's GOP opponent in the Georgia Senate race, Mike Collins) in the part of this speech I've queued up:
Now, Savannah, I don't know if you saw the mess in Washington last week. The president -- the president was so humiliated in Hormuz, he threw his toys out the stroller and refused to sign the affordable housing bill. Did you see that? But wait, that's after he gave some felon donor a no-bid contract for the Reflecting Pool and it filled up with algae, which for some reason required the deployment of the National Guard. And then because of his war and his tariffs, inflation rose to over 4%. He promised to bring down prices on Day One. Do you remember that? Y'all know what today is? Today is Day 524, and groceries, rent, and healthcare are at their all-time highs in American history. Donald Trump and his puppet Mike Collins, they doubled health insurance premiums for more than a million Georgians and threw 300,000 Georgians off their insurance altogether. I heard from a woman with cancer who waits tables for a living and said she was going to lose her health coverage in the middle of chemotherapy. And they did this to pay for a tax cut that went overwhelmingly to the rich and to corporate America. Did you know that, Savannah? Savannah, I never want to hear these two pretend they give a damn about working people again.Trump is going to make a speech tomorrow night in which he'll claim, among other things, that Ossoff and Raphael Warnock won illegitimately in the same 2020 election that defeated him. In part this is because of Trump's racism, specifically his hatred of Black women -- it kills him that Ossoff and Warnock won because of a strong Black vote, and it kills him that two embodiments of that honest democratic process were Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, Black election workers in Fulton County who were defamed by Trump's thuggish surrogate Rudy Giuliani, and who won a $146 million financial judgment against him.
But Trump can also see that Ossoff is the favorite to win again this year, and he's winning by attacking Trump. (Trump can't rebut Ossoff's attacks effectively, so he compared Ossoff to Pee-wee Herman in a mddle-of-the night post at Truth Social on the Fourth of July. Pathetic.)
All this brings me to Matthew Yglesias, who, preposterously, believes it's bad to fight if you want to win:
In the TV show “Andor” — the best recent art about politics — Diego Luna as the lead character observes, “We’re in a war. You wanna fight, or do you wanna win?”But that's a caricature of a Democratic "fight" message. It's not what Ossoff is saying. It's not even what Platner was saying. As Ossoff makes clear while campaigning in a quintessentially purple state, you can be very angry and appeal to normie and moderate voters in 2026.
And I think that this is a question I am constantly asking my “Politix” Co-Host Brian Beutler to look into his heart and ponder. Because for the last few years, it really seems to me that for many Democrats, the answer is that they want to fight....
“You voted for Trump because of legitimate concerns about Biden’s failures on immigration and inflation, and I hear and acknowledge those concerns, but Trump has betrayed his affordability promises and I can help” is a plausible message for winning over disillusioned Trump voters. “You and the majority of your friends and family voted for a racist, K.K.K.-like fascist movement and now you need to repent” is really not.
Yglesias continues:
It’s fun for Graham Platner to campaign with the Dropkick Murphys, but that’s just another way of saying that expressive politics in blue states is more fun than winning over swing voters.But the campaign in which Platner stage-dived during a performance by the proudly lefty, anti-ICE band was working, and would have worked if Platner's personal failings hadn't gotten in the way.
Voters want to see some fight right now. They know it's justified. And in addition, it can define you as a candidate before Trump or Fox can do it for you.
No comments:
Post a Comment